1 / 32

CTC 450 Review

This review covers the essentials of water quality and distribution systems, including water requirements, layout, well construction, pipe types, valves, and more.

dtreadwell
Télécharger la présentation

CTC 450 Review

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CTC 450 Review • Water Quality

  2. CTC 450 • Water Distribution Systems

  3. Objectives • Understand water & pressure requirements • Know the basics of providing water for fire protection requirements • Understand the layout of water distribution systems • Understand the basics of well construction and intake structures • Understand the basic types of pipes • Understand the basic types of valves

  4. Water Quantity • Daily consumption varies widely • 600 gpd per metered service including residential, commercial and industrial customers • 100-200 gpd per capita (80-150 gpd for residential) • 40 gpd per capita (using high-efficiency plumbing) • Consumption also varies by season/day/hour • Design of water systems must account for variation in municipal water consumption and water needed for fighting fires

  5. MVWA • 19.9 mgd average • 126,250 people • 158 gpcd

  6. Water Pressure • Distribution system (65-75 psi) • Residential service connection (40 psi) • Maximum pressure is 150 psi • Pressures >100 psi are undesirable • more breaks, greater leaks, undue stress

  7. Needed Fire Flow (NFF) • Rate of water flow required for fire fighting to confine a major fire to the building within a block or other group complex with minimal loss. • Insurance Services Office (ISO) • Guide for Determination of Needed Fire Flow

  8. NFF Calculation • Based on construction, occupancy, exposure and communication of each building in a building complex (see section starting on page 164)

  9. Practical Limits • Flow range could be 500 gpm (minimum) to 3500 gpm • Automatic sprinklers are effective and minimize flows that must be required

  10. Water Supply Capacity • Gravity system is preferable (more reliable) • Storage is used to equalize pumping rates and provide water for firefighting • Pumping systems should be designed for reliability (electrical supply should be provided by 2 separate lines from different directions)

  11. Distribution System • Systems should be made redundant by interconnecting pipes into loops. • Valves should be placed to allow repairs with minimal disruption to surrounding • Fire hydrants should be installed at locations convenient for the fire department

  12. Sources of Water • Well Construction via drilling-hydraulic rotary or cable-tool percussion • http://www.thewaterexperts.com/goodsservices.htm • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drilling_rig#Cable_tool_drilling • Surface-Water Intakes (rivers, lakes or reservoirs)

  13. Piping Network • Networks consist of storage reservoirs, main, booster pumping stations, fire hydrants and service lines • Provide redundancy via grids and loops

  14. Service Connections • Corporation Stop connection from the distribution main (can be connected while the main is pressurized and in service) • Installation http://www.freeed.net/sweethaven/BldgConst/Plumbing01/lessonmain.asp?iNum=fra0204

  15. Kinds of Pipe • Bell and Spigot • Ductile iron • Plastic (HDPE/PVC) • Concrete • Steel • Residential (copper or plastic)

  16. Pipe Strength • Different pipes have different sizes and thicknesses • Must use correct pipe to handle trench depth, bedding type, and live loads • Must place pipe below the frost line to prevent freezing/breakage

  17. Joints • Compression • Mechanical • Flanged • Solvent • Soldered

  18. Distribution Storage • Use consumption curves to determine storage needed • Look closely at example 6-5

  19. Valves • Gate/Butterfly/Swing • Check (flow in one direction) • Automatic • Pressure-Reducing Valves • Solenoid

  20. Gate Valve

  21. Butterfly Valve

  22. Swing Valve

  23. Other Valves • Check Valve (permits water flow in only one direction) • Pressure Reducing Valve (lowers pressure) • Altitude Valves (controls flow into and out of a storage tank) • Solenoid Pilot Valve (controls valve via electric current) • Air release Valve

  24. Fire Hydrants

  25. Evaluating Distribution SystemsQuantity • Supply + storage must meet current daily demands (& future anticipated demands 10 years in the future • Reservoirs should have 30-day storage capacity • Wells should not “mine” water

  26. Evaluating Distribution SystemsIntake Capacity • Intake structures • must be designed large enough to handle demand • Must be reliable

  27. Evaluating Distribution SystemsPumping Capacity • Pumps (should be reliable) • From source to water treatment plant • From water treatment plant clear-well to distribution system • Booster pumping stations

  28. Evaluating Distribution SystemsPiping Network • Design life 40-50 years (actual 50-100) • Large mains -12” • Submains-6” or 8”

  29. Question 1 • What is the yearly average consumption of water per person per day? • What does NFF stand for? • What does gpcd stand for? • What does MVWA stand for? • What is a corporation stop? • How does a check valve operate?

More Related